Tablet Magazine

11 February 2025
13 Shevat 5785

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February 10, 2025

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February 11, 2025

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Listen to Tablet

Navigate to Sanhedrin 54 and 55 podcast page

Take One

Sanhedrin 54 and 55

Punishment and logic

February 10, 2025

Navigate to Sanhedrin 56 podcast page

Take One

Sanhedrin 56

With apologies to Taylor Swift

February 11, 2025

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Tablet talks about Judaism a lot, but sometimes we like to change the subject. Maggie Phillips covers religious communities across the U.S.—from Christians to Muslims, Hindus to Baha’i, Jehovah’s Witnesses to pagans—to find out what they’re talking about.

Collection
You know the Jewish history of Manhattan’s Lower East Side: pushcart peddlers, crowded tenements, Yiddish storefront signs. But Tablet has explored another world beneath all that—crooks, mobsters, thugs, and violent criminals.
See the full collection →︎

Chronicled and mythologized in scholarly and popular history books, novels, films, and plays, New York’s Lower East Side in the late 19th and early 20th centuries was overcrowded, and teeming with peddlers, tailors, sweatshops, and barely livable tenement houses. By 1910, an estimated 540,000 Jews resided within the neighborhood’s 1.5 square miles. The poverty, hardships, and daily struggle to survive drove some Jewish immigrants to seek other ways to make a living, even get rich. Hence, the Lower East Side also had a vast collection of crooks, pimps, prostitutes, thieves, pickpockets, gangsters, fraudsters, forgers, arsonists, and hoodlums. Offered here and in future articles are portraits of some of these nefarious characters, who also left their mark on the Lower East Side’s historical legacy.

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